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| editing = [[Patrick Lussier]]
| editing = [[Patrick Lussier]]
| distributor = [[Dimension Films]] (USA)
| distributor = [[Dimension Films]] (USA)
| released = December 25, 1993
| released = December 20, 1996
| runtime = 113 minutes
| runtime = 113 minutes
| country = [[Cinema of the United States|United States]]
| country = [[Cinema of the United States|United States]]
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| followed_by = ''[[Scream 2]]''
| followed_by = ''[[Scream 2]]''
}}
}}
'''''Scream''''' is a 1993 [[horror film]] directed by [[Wes Craven]] from a screenplay by [[Kevin Williamson (screenwriter)|Kevin Williamson]], and the first of the [[Scream (film series)|''Scream'' series]]. Filmed mostly in [[Santa Rosa, California]], the film tells the story of the [[fictional town]] Woodsboro, CA being terrorized by a masked killer who enjoys tormenting his victims with phone calls and movie references. The killer's main target is Sidney Prescott (skeet Ulrich), a teenage girl whose mother Maureen fell victim to a brutal murder one year earlier. The film takes on a [[Whodunit|who done it]] mystery, with many of her friends and townspeople being fellow targets and suspects.
'''''Scream''''' is a 1996 [[horror film]] directed by [[Wes Craven]] from a screenplay by [[Kevin Williamson (screenwriter)|Kevin Williamson]], and the first of the [[Scream (film series)|''Scream'' series]]. Filmed mostly in [[Santa Rosa, California]], the film tells the story of the [[fictional town]] Woodsboro, CA being terrorized by a masked killer who enjoys tormenting his victims with phone calls and movie references. The killer's main target is Sidney Prescott (skeet Ulrich), a teenage girl whose mother Maureen fell victim to a brutal murder one year earlier. The film takes on a [[Whodunit|who done it]] mystery, with many of her friends and townspeople being fellow targets and suspects.


''Scream'' revitalized the [[slasher film]] genre in the mid-1990s, similar to the impact ''[[Halloween (1978 film)|Halloween]]'' (1978) had on late [[1970s in film|1970s film]], by using a standard concept with a [[tongue-in-cheek]] approach that combined straightforward scares with dialogue that satirized slasher film conventions.
''Scream'' revitalized the [[slasher film]] genre in the mid-1990s, similar to the impact ''[[Halloween (1978 film)|Halloween]]'' (1978) had on late [[1970s in film|1970s film]], by using a standard concept with a [[tongue-in-cheek]] approach that combined straightforward scares with dialogue that satirized slasher film conventions.

Revision as of 23:39, 27 September 2009

Scream
File:Scream movie poster.jpg
Theatrical poster
Directed byWes Craven
Written byKevin Williamson
Produced byCathy Konrad
Cary Woods
StarringDavid Arquette
Skeet ulrich
Courtney cox
Rose Mcgowan
Matthew Lillard
neve campbell
Drew Barrymore
CinematographyMark Irwin
Edited byPatrick Lussier
Music byMarco Beltrami
Distributed byDimension Films (USA)
Release date
December 20, 1996
Running time
113 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$14,000,000 USD (estimated)
Box office$173,046,567

Scream is a 1996 horror film directed by Wes Craven from a screenplay by Kevin Williamson, and the first of the Scream series. Filmed mostly in Santa Rosa, California, the film tells the story of the fictional town Woodsboro, CA being terrorized by a masked killer who enjoys tormenting his victims with phone calls and movie references. The killer's main target is Sidney Prescott (skeet Ulrich), a teenage girl whose mother Maureen fell victim to a brutal murder one year earlier. The film takes on a who done it mystery, with many of her friends and townspeople being fellow targets and suspects.

Scream revitalized the slasher film genre in the mid-1990s, similar to the impact Halloween (1978) had on late 1970s film, by using a standard concept with a tongue-in-cheek approach that combined straightforward scares with dialogue that satirized slasher film conventions.

Plot

Casey Becker (Drew Barrymore) receives a phonecall from a man who starts a friendly conversation until he threatens Casey. The man tells Casey to turn on the patio lights, revealing her boyfriend Steve (Kevin Patrick Walls) tied to a chair. He quizzes Casey on horror movies and she gets a question wrong. When Casey turns on the patio lights again Steve has been gutted. The man gives Casey a bonus round; when she refuses to answer the question a chair smashes through the door. Casey tries to escape and fight of the killer but eventually is caught and stabbed. In her last and dying movement Casey takes of the mask to reveal who the killer is, however the camera pans out just before doing so and Casey is gutted.

Sidney Prescott (Neve Campbell) is attempting to cope with the anniversary of her mother's rape and murder. The following night she is attacked by the same person who killed Casey and Steve .

Reacting to circumstantial evidence, Sidney accuses her boyfriend Billy Loomis (Skeet Ulrich) of being the attacker. She stays with her friend dewey Riley (David Arquette) and Dewey's brother Dewey (Rose Mcgowan). While there, she receives a phone call from her attacker. He says Billy Loomis is not the attacker and she will find out who is soon.

Sidney is forced to deal with the scandalization of her attack by tabloid television newswoman Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox). Gale is responsible for a book revealing the affair between Sidney's mother and her convicted killer, Cotton Weary (Liev Schreiber). School is canceled as a precautionary measure, leaving the building abandoned. Despite the closing, the principal (Henry Winkler) is killed while in school. Unaware of the principal's fate, Tatum's boyfriend Stu Macher (Matthew Lillard) throws a party. When Sidney and Tatum arrive at Stu's house they see Randy Meeks (Jamie Kennedy), a horror movie fanatic. Billy also shows up; he and Sidney go to Stu's parents' room. Tatum is attacked and killed in the garage.

Gale, sensing the potential for a scoop, hides a video camera inside the house. She then begins searching outside for anything suspicious with Dewey's help. The party-goers receive word of the principal's death and most of them head to the school.

While Sidney and Billy are upstairs the killer appears and stabs Billy. Sidney escapes out the window where she sees Tatum's corpse. Randy, unaware of what's going on and watching Halloween, avoids death when the killer hears Sidney's screams. Gale's cameraman Kenny (W. Earl Brown) lets a terrified Sidney inside her news van. Kenny and Sidney see the killer nearly attack Randy on the video feed, which has a thirty second delay. Kenny steps outside the van and the killer slashes his throat.

Sidney escapes the van to find Dewey stepping out of the house, but he falls down to reveal a knife in his back. Sidney runs to his car to escape but the keys aren't there; the killer shows her the keys and pursues her. Sidney runs back to the house where she finds Randy and Stu, who seem to be the only remaining suspects. When they both accuse each other of being the killer, Sidney does not know who to trust and slams the door in their faces.

Billy falls down the stairs, seriously injured. He asks for the gun that Sidney found and she gives it to him. Billy opens the door, letting Randy into the house. Randy claims that Stu has gone mad. Billy gives an evil smile to Randy and says, "We all go a little mad sometimes", then shoots Randy, who falls to the floor. Billy tells Sidney the blood on his chest is corn syrup. Sidney turns and finds Stu, who unveils a voice-changing box.

Billy and Stu committed the murders to get revenge on Sidney's mother. Sidney's mother had an affair with Billy's father (C. W. Morgan), which ended Billy's parents' marriage. Billy and Stu murdered Sidney's mother, not Cotton Weary, who was convicted based on Sidney's testimony. Stu and Billy have abducted Sidney's father and used his cellphone. They plan to murder Sidney and frame her father by shooting him in the head to make it seem he committed suicide. Stu and Billy stab each other in non-vital places so it appears they're the only surviving victims of Sidney's father's rampage. Billy stabs Stu too deeply and he begins bleeding profusely. Gale arrives and tries to shoot Billy, but the safety is on and he knocks her out. Billy is about to kill Gale when Stu notices Sidney is gone. Sidney pretends to call the house in the voice of the killer, but Billy knows it's her. She tells Billy and Stu that she called the police and they're on their way. Billy tells Stu to stay on the phone with Sidney while he finds her. Sidney stabs Billy with an umbrella and he collapses. Stu tries to kill Sidney but she pushes a television onto his head, killing him. Randy is shown to be alive, but Billy, still alive, attacks him. He then attacks Sidney and is about to stab her when Gale shoots him. Randy warns Sidney that the killer always "comes back to life" for one last scare. Billy springs to life and Sidney shoots him in the head, killing him.

Dewey is later shown being carried away on a stretcher, alive and conscious. Gale makes an impromptu report on the events of the previous night as the authorities arrive.

Cast and characters

  • Neve Campbell as Sidney Prescott: Still deeply affected by the horrific murder of her mother, Maureen, Sidney suffers from intimacy issues and feels that she cannot satisfy her boyfriend, Billy Loomis. She testified against Maureen's lover, Cotton Weary, and holds a grudge against journalist Gale Weathers for accusing her of falsehood in her book about the crime. However, these issues become the last things on her mind when a masked psychopath begins stalking her school friends.
  • Courteney Cox as Gale Weathers: An ambitious journalist and author, who penned a book about the murder of Maureen Prescott, supposedly in a bid to exonerate prime suspect Cotton Weary. She appears to be a single-minded, heartless woman with a talent for deception, effortlessly manipulating almost everyone around her, including love struck deputy sheriff Dewey Riley.
  • David Arquette as Deputy Dwight "Dewey" Riley: A kind, yet dopey police officer and older brother of Sidney's best friend, Tatum. He falls for the charms of journalist Gale Weathers and is stabbed by the killer but survives.
  • Rose McGowan as Tatum Riley: Sidney's best friend, Stu Macher's girlfriend and younger sister of Officer Dewey Riley. Tatum is a loyal friend to Sidney whom she tries to support in every difficult situation. She is killed during Stu's party.
  • Skeet Ulrich as Billy Loomis: Sidney's boyfriend and Stu's best friend. He is one of the two killers in the film. Billy went insane after his mother abandoned him, following his discovery of his father's affair with Maureen Prescott, whom he subsequently killed for revenge with the help of his less intelligent and manipulated friend, Stu Macher. A year later, Billy and his accomplice continue their rampage, killing people strongly connected to Sidney. Billy is shot by Gale then shot in the head by Sidney, killing him.
  • Matthew Lillard as Stuart "Stu" Macher: Tatum's boyfriend and Billy's best friend. Stu is the second killer in the film. He often annoys his friends with his immature behaviour, mainly by making sarcastic jokes about the murders. During a confrontation Sidney pushes a television on top of his head, killing him.
  • Jamie Kennedy as Randy Meeks: Randy is a friend of Sidney, Tatum and Stu. Somewhat of a nerd, Randy works in the local video store and considers himself an expert on horror films. He explains the rules of surviving a horror movie while at Stu's party. He survives the killings because of his previously lamented virginal status.
  • Drew Barrymore as Casey Becker
  • Henry Winkler as Principal Arthur Himbry
  • Joseph Whipp as Sheriff Burke
  • Lawrence Hecht as Neil Prescott
  • W. Earl Brown as Kenneth "Kenny" Jones
  • Kevin Patrick Walls as Steven Orth

Cameos

Satirical and self-referential style

During the opening scene, Casey discusses movies, sequels, and trivia with the killer on the phone. Randy seems almost unable to tell the difference between a movie world and his own world. He constantly compares what is going on to situations in horror films, and at one point even says: "If this was a scary movie, I would be the main suspect." Randy also seems to believe very devoutly in his "Rules For Surviving a Horror Movie;" he eventually believes that the only reason he himself survives is because he's a virgin. Billy also comments that life is just "one big movie. Only you can't pick your genre."

Most notable of all, the climactic scene of the film revolves around the characters watching the movie Halloween, unaware that they themselves are being watched on a hidden camera with a time delay. At one point, Randy (played by Jamie Kennedy) yells at the movie: "Look behind you, Jamie", unaware that there is also a killer behind him. Kenny watches this from inside the news van, and also yells: "Behind you, kid." despite the time delay meaning the warning is just as pointless as Randy's. The result is a movie character (Kenny) watching what the hidden camera in the room shows, giving advice to another movie character (Randy), also watching a movie, also giving advice to a movie character (in the movie, he's watching).

In addition to this, the movie features cameos, such as Linda Blair and Henry Winkler and general references to Hollywood figures, such as Sharon Stone and Richard Gere. The Richard Gere scene mentions the well-known gerbil urban legend. Craven stated that he received calls from agents telling him that if he leaves that scene in, he would never work again.[1][2]

Rules

A signature device, started in Scream and continued in Scream 2 and Scream 3, was the typical "rules" for the slasher subgenre of horror movies, always recited by the movie-buff character Randy.[3] In Scream, those rules are:

  • You can never have sex.
  • You can never drink or do drugs. (The "sin factor, an extension of number one".)
  • Never, ever, EVER, under any circumstances say "I'll be right back", 'cause you won't be back.

A similar set of "rules" was used for the movie's trailer:

  • Don't answer the phone
  • Don't open the door
  • Don't try to hide (on the video/DVD/Bluray edition, it's "Don't leave the house")
  • But most of all, don't scream

References to other horror films

The film features numerous in-jokes and references to other horror projects. The victims in Scream are quite self-aware: they each make clear their familiarity with, and poke fun at, teen slasher and horror flicks, which sets up their fairly ironic responses to the film's situations.[4]

Two of the most common references are to A Nightmare on Elm Street and its director Wes Craven. In the audio commentary for the DVD, Craven says that he almost took out the line where Casey Becker says the first A Nightmare on Elm Street was good but the rest sucked, because he thought it would make him seem egotistical. However, it was pointed out to him that he had co-written the third film and also wrote and directed the seventh. A Nightmare on Elm Street is also referenced in the high school janitor. Fred, played by Craven, wears an outfit resembling Freddy Krueger's. Later in the film, Tatum tells Sidney that she is "starting to sound like a Wes Carpenter flick", a fictional name created from compounding the names Wes Craven and John Carpenter (co-producer of the first three installments in the Halloween film series, co-writer of the first two, and director of the first).

At one point, Billy sneaks into Sidney's room through her window, startling her, in an homage to the scene where Glen sneaks into Nancy's room in A Nightmare on Elm Street. The similarity between the scenes in emphasized by the physical resemblance Skeet Ulrich, who plays Billy's character, bears to the young Johnny Depp, who played Glen's character.

Towards the end of the film, Sidney kills Stu, after a chase, by pushing a TV on to him. In A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors, someone is killed by a TV when Freddy appears from the top of the set and pulls a victim up and into the screen.

In addition to its director, Halloween is referenced many times throughout the film. When Casey's parents come home and see that something is wrong, her father says to her mother, "Drive down to the Mackenzies", which is a quote from Halloween. During the party scene, Randy Meeks, Stu Macher and the other partygoers are watching the horror film. They watch many famous scenes such as Michael Myers murdering Bob, as well as Laurie Strode discovering her friend's dead bodies scattered in the bedroom. The song that Billy puts on when he and Sidney are making out in her room is a cover version of "Don't Fear the Reaper" which was featured in Halloween in the scene where Laurie and Annie are driving to their babysitting jobs.

Billy's surname, Loomis, is the same as that of Donald Pleasence's character in Halloween (1978), which in turn was the name of Marion Crane's lover in Psycho. In a similar fashion to Marion Crane (Janet Leigh), Scream's highly-billed star Drew Barrymore dies early in the film. Referring to Crane's similar premature murder, Robin Wood writes of the "alienation effect" of killing of the "apparent center of the film."[5] In the later stages of the film, Billy Loomis quotes Norman Bates, saying "We all go a little mad sometimes." Licking his fake blood, Loomis says that it is actually corn syrup and food coloring, "the same stuff they used for pig's blood in Carrie". Billy later praises Norman Bates as a more effective horror killer as he has no motive for killing people.

As Stu and Billy reveal themselves to Sidney as the killers, they stand head to head, echoing a famous still photo from the film The Thing With Two Heads (1972).

When Casey (Drew Barrymore) is dragged across the lawn by her murderer it strongly resembles a scene from Dementia 13.

The blood pooling at Gale's (Courtney Cox) feet by the news van is reminiscent of a scene in Night of the Living Dead where blood pools on the floor by Barbara's feet (played by Judith O'Dea).

Many films are briefly mentioned during a scene in which Billy and Stu visit Randy at work at a video store. Films Randy mentions include Candyman, The Howling, Prom Night, Everybody's All-American. Frankenstein is showing on the monitors.

Sidney mentions The Town That Dreaded Sundown while she, Tatum & Dewey are walking through town the day of the party.

During the party scene, the partygoers are struggling with which movie to watch. The possibilities include The Evil Dead, Hellraiser, The Fog and Terror Train. Clerks is seen as a videotape on top of a television.

During the party scene, when Billy arrives, Randy exclaims "What's Leatherface doing here?". Leatherface is the antagonist in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.

In addition to mentioning several horror films throughout the film, many minor characters were portrayed by actors who have worked with Wes Craven before and have also appeared in prominent horror films. For example, Linda Blair, who played Regan in The Exorcist, also plays the obnoxious reporter who approaches Sidney when she first returns to school after being attacked by the killer. Joseph Whipp, who plays Sheriff Burke in Scream, also plays a deputy sheriff in A Nightmare on Elm Street. Frances Lee McCain, playing Mrs. Riley, also played the part of Billy's mother, Lynn Peltzer, in 1984's Gremlins.

Other films seen or mentioned

Reception and impact

The reaction to Scream was generally positive among film reviewers, who appreciated the shift from the teen slasher films of the 1980s and their "endless series of laborious, half-baked sequels."[6] Williamson's script was praised as containing a "fiendishly clever, complicated plot" which "deftly mixes irony, self-reference and wry social commentary with chills and blood spills."[7]

Roger Ebert appreciated "the in-jokes and the self-aware characters", but was confused over whether the level of violence was "defused by the ironic way the film uses it and comments on it."[4] The New York Times says "not much of 'Scream' is that gruesome", but observes that Craven "wants things both ways, capitalizing on lurid material while undermining it with mocking humor. Not even horror fans who can answer all this film's knowing trivia questions may be fully comfortable with such an exploitative mix."[3]

Scream ranked #32 on Entertainment Weekly's list of the 50 Best High School Movies and #13 on Bravo's 100 Scariest Movie Moments. In 2008, Entertainment Weekly dubbed the film a "New Classic" by ranking it #60 in their list of the 100 Best Films of the Last 13 Years. The film received an 83% fresh rating on RottenTomatoes.com.[8] The film ranks #482 on Empire's 2008 list of the 500 greatest movies of all time.[9]

Box office performance

The film opened in 1,413 theaters, taking $6,354,586 in its opening weekend. The film made almost 87 million dollars in its initial release, and was then re-released to theatres on April 11, 1997 and went on to make another 16 million, making total a domestic gross of $103,046,663,[10][11] with, as of 2007, a worldwide lifetime gross of $173,046,663.[12] It peaked at number 13 in the U.S. domestic box office. The film's success made it the highest grossing slasher movie as of 2009.

Awards

The film won several awards, including Best Movie at the MTV Movie Awards 1997, and Saturn Awards for Best Actress (Neve Campbell), Best Writer and Best Horror Film. Craven was awarded the Grand Prize at the Gérardmer Film Festival.[13]

Horror films

The film inspired a revival of interest in the genre, including Urban Legend, Idle Hands, I Know What You Did Last Summer, and I Still Know What You Did Last Summer. Two sequels were produced (Scream 2 and Scream 3), with Williamson's I Know What You Did Last Summer following in 1997. It was also the inspiration for several parody films such as the Scary Movie series. "Scary Movie" had been Scream's working title.

The film has been parodied many times on television. During the 1997 MTV Movie Awards, the opening scene was parodied, with Mike Myers calling and terrorizing Casey Becker instead of the film's killer, Ghostface.

Soundtrack

Untitled

When Billy comes into Sidney's room at the beginning of the movie a cover of Blue Öyster Cult's song "(Don't Fear) The Reaper" performed by Gus Black is played. This song is played in the first Halloween film when Annie and Laurie are on their way to baby-sit.

The theme song for all three movies is "Red Right Hand" by Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds.

An alternate version of the music video "Drop Dead Gorgeous" by Republica featuring clips from the film was shown on music networks such as MTV. Although the song can be heard in the film, it does not show up on the soundtrack album. The song was also used in one of the TV promo spots for the film.

Although the original version of "School's Out" recorded by Alice Cooper, was featured in the film, the soundtrack contains a cover version performed by Sebastian Bach's old band The Last Hard Men.

The soundtrack album was released on December 17, 1996 featuring songs from the film. A CD featuring Marco Beltrami's orchestral music for Scream and Scream 2 was released on the Varèse Sarabande label in 1997.[14]

Track listing

  1. "Youth of America" - Birdbrain
  2. "Whisper" - Catherine
  3. "Red Right Hand" - Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds
  4. "(Don't Fear) The Reaper" - Gus
  5. "Artificial World" [Interdimensional Mix] - Julee Cruise
  6. "Better Than Me" - Sister Machine Gun
  7. "Whisper to a Scream (Birds Fly)" - Soho
  8. "First Cool Hive" - Moby
  9. "Bitter Pill" - The Connells
  10. "School's Out" - The Last Hard Men
  11. "Trouble In Woodsboro"/"Sidney's Lament" - Marco Beltrami
  12. "Blasphemy"- Immediate Music (Bonus track)

VHS and DVD releases

The original, gorier version of the film was released on VHS in 1997. The box covers classified the film as rated "R" even though it was actually the unrated version. The unrated cut was only available on video when the film was released for sale to the general public while the rental version, released earlier that year, still contained the theatrical cut. The unrated version was officially released as "The Director's Cut" on laser disc but has yet to be released on DVD in America. The unrated version has been released on DVD in other regions such as Europe and Japan with quality varying. Differences in the film include: A shot of Steve's entrails falling out of his stomach; a longer, slower version of the shot where Casey's body is shown hanging from a tree; Tatum's head getting crushed by the garage door; More blood can be seen pouring down Kenny's chest after getting his throat slashed; A more graphic version of the scene where Stu and Billy stab each other.

When the film was released for sale on VHS in 1997 it was available in several different forms including three collectible covers with one featuring Drew Barrymore's face, one had Neve Campbell's face and the other had Courteney Cox's face. There was also a collector's set which came with the wide screen version of the film on one tape and another tape featuring the movie with audio commentary by Wes Craven and Kevin Williamson. The set also featured a special Scream phone card with 10 minutes of talk time and three large collector's cards with the faces of Drew, Neve and Courteney (the same images used on the special VHS covers).

On September 26, 2000, the film was re-released on DVD in an 'Ultimate Collection' boxed set with Scream 2 and Scream 3 and a bonus DVD/DVD-Rom with special features and 24 page behind-the-scene booklet. The box set is now out of print.

References

  1. ^ http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/Boulevard/7811/screamreferences.html
  2. ^ http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,289310,00.html
  3. ^ a b Maslin, Jant (December 20, 1996). "Scream". The New York Times. Retrieved 2007-05-31.
  4. ^ a b Ebert, Roger (December 20, 1996). "Scream". Chicago Sun Times. Retrieved 2007-01-27.
  5. ^ Wood, Robin (1989). Hitchcock's Films Revisited. London: Faber and Faber. p. 146. ISBN 0571162266.
  6. ^ Satirical `Scream' Is Out for Blood -- and Lots of It
  7. ^ Harrington, Richard (December 20, 1996). "Go Ahead and 'Scream'". Washington Post. Retrieved 2007-01-27.
  8. ^ http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1074316-scream/
  9. ^ http://www.empireonline.com/500/4.asp
  10. ^ Scream (1996)
  11. ^ Scream (1996/I) - Box office / business
  12. ^ "Scream". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2006-12-27.
  13. ^ "Awards for Scream (1996/I)". IMDb. Retrieved 2007-01-28.
  14. ^ Carlsson, Mikael. "Scream/Scream 2". Music from the Movies. Retrieved 2007-01-27.